Raghu Raghuram is considered an experienced technologist who helped shape VMware’s strategy and is expected to stick to it. Credit: VMware VMware says its COO for products and cloud services, Raghu Raghuram, will be its next permanent CEO, a signal that the company’s board intends to keep VMware on its present course. When Raghuram takes the reins in June, it will end a four-month interregnum, during which the company has been helmed by CFO Zane Rowe. Former CEO Pat Gelsinger became the CEO at Intel in February, returning to the company where he had worked for 30 years. VMware is the unquestioned 800-pound gorilla of the enterprise hypervisor market and has pursued both internal technology development and a succession of strategic acquisitions to diversify its business. The company’s hypervisor business, buttressed by deals with AWS, Azure, Google Cloud and other hyperscalers to provide its core products as cloud services, is still the main revenue stream. But VMware also plays in security, containerization, and cloud-native applications. Raghuram’s hiring reflects the board’s satisfaction with VMware’s current course, according to Mark Lockwood, research vice president at Gartner. “He’s someone who has informed the company’s strategy for a number of years, so there will be a lot of business as usual,” he said. “They have their hands in a lot of different places, and that diversifies their income, and it seems like that strategy has obviously been crucial for them.” Like Gelsinger before him, Raghuram has strengths as a technologist, but perhaps not Gelsinger’s style of being an outspoken presence in the business-technology world. During his tenure at VMware, Raghuram has led its software-defined data center business, its cloud infrastructure and management business, product management and business planning for VMware’s virtual infrastructure business, and product management for ESX and vSphere. Gelsinger was a part of VMware’s search committee for his replacement, and the company is thought to have narrowed the field to two possible internal hires before the decision was made. The other candidate was COO Sanjay Poonen, who is set to leave the company after the committee settled on Raghuram. “[Poonen] is an equally skilled executive, but he is more about the go-to-market, execution side,” said IDC senior vice president of enterprise infrastructure Matt Eastwood. “I think they made the decision that they needed a technologist in charge.” The announcement of Raghuram’s selection also contained some rosy preliminary earnings figures. VMware expects to announce revenues of $1.39 billion, a 12.5% year-on-year rise, for the first quarter of fiscal 2022, with per-share earnings at $1.01 on a GAAP basis. The company’s shares rose 1.2% with the news. Related content news Elon Musk’s xAI to build supercomputer to power next-gen Grok The reported supercomputer project coincides with xAI’s recent announcement of a $6 billion series B funding round. By Gyana Swain May 27, 2024 3 mins Supercomputers GPUs news Regulators sound out users on cloud services competition concerns Cloud customers are more concerned with technical barriers than egress fees in contemplating cloud platform switches, it seems. By John Leyden May 24, 2024 4 mins Cloud Management Multi Cloud how-to Backgrounding and foregrounding processes in the Linux terminal Running processes in the background can be convenient when you want to use your terminal window for something else while you wait for the first task to complete. By Sandra Henry-Stocker May 24, 2024 5 mins Linux news FCC proposes $6M fine for AI-generated robocall spoofing Biden’s voice The incident reignites concerns over the potential misuse of deepfakes, a technology that can create realistic and often undetectable audio and video forgeries. By Gyana Swain May 24, 2024 3 mins Artificial Intelligence PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe